Depressants

Overview Includes barbiturates (barbs), benzodiazepines (benzos) and sedative-hypnotics.
Depressants will put you to sleep, relieve anxiety and muscle spasms, and prevent seizures.
Barbiturates are older drugs and include butalbital (Fiorina®), phenobarbital, Pentothal®, Seconal®
and Nembutal®. You can rapidly develop dependence on and tolerance to barbiturates, meaning you need more and more of them to feel and function normally. This makes them unsafe, increasing the likelihood of coma or death. Benzodiazepines were developed to replace barbiturates, though they still share many of the undesirable side effects. Some examples are Valium®, Xanax®, Halcion®, Ativan®, Klonopin® and Restoril®. Ambien® and Sonata® are sedative-hypnotic medications approved for the short-term treatment of insomnia that share many of the properties of benzodiazepines. Other CNS depressants include meprobamate, methaqualone (Quaalude®), and the illicit drug GHB.

 

Street names Barbs, Benzos, Downers, Georgia Home Boy, GHB, Grievous Bodily Harm, Liquid X, Nerve Pills, Phennies, R2, Reds, Roofies, Rophies, Tranks, Yellows

 

Looks like Depressants come in the form of pills, syrups, and injectable liquids.

 

Methods of abuse Individuals abuse depressants to experience euphoria.
Depressants are also used with other drugs to add to the other drugs’ high or to deal with their
side effects. Abusers take higher doses than people taking the drugs under a doctor’s supervision
for therapeutic purposes. Depressants like GHB and Rohypnol® are also misused to facilitate sexual assault.

 

Effect on mind Depressants used therapeutically do what they are prescribed for to put you to
sleep, relieve anxiety and muscle spasms, and prevent seizures. They also: cause amnesia, leaving no memory of events that occur while under the influence, reduce your reaction time, impair mental functioning and judgment, and cause confusion. Long-term use of depressants produces
psychological dependence and tolerance.

 

Effect on body Some depressants can relax the muscles. Unwanted physical effects include slurred speech, loss of motor coordination, weakness, headache, light headedness, blurred vision, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, low blood pressure, and slowed breathing. Prolonged use of depressants can lead to physical dependence even at doses recommended for medical treatment. Unlike barbiturates, large doses of benzodiazepines are rarely fatal unless combined with other drugs or alcohol. But unlike the withdrawal syndrome seen with most other drugs of abuse, withdrawal from depressants can be life threatening.

 

Drugs causing similar effects Some antipsychotics, antihistamines, and antidepressants produce
sedative effects. Alcohol’s effects are similar to those of depressants.

 

Overdose effects High doses of depressants or use of them with alcohol or other drugs can slow
heart rate and breathing enough to cause death.

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